Summary: The Integrator Open Letter to NIH NCCAM's
incoming director, Josephine Briggs, MD, stimulated many comments. Many asked
me to share any response from Dr. Briggs. On February 9, a response arrived, not
from Briggs, but from NCCAM's public liaison, Chris Thomsen. The letter references Briggs'
perceptions and plans relative to her taking over a position of tremendous influence for the field despite having no background in complementary or integrative medicine. Here is the letter, some musing on hope, and on colonization.

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Chris Thomsen, director of the NCCAM Office of Communications and Public
Liaison, sent a letter of response which was mailed prior to my publication of responses, and which arrived February 9. The letter touches
on areas of Briggs' experience which may be useful to her in her new post.
According to Thomsen, Briggs is in a period of "intense listening"
and is "interested in hearing from all concerned about the future
directions of CAM research."

Take it in, consider becoming one of Briggs' teachers. Then consider your next
steps.

______________________________

Letter
from NCCAM/Dr. Briggs on Her Plans for NCCAM

Department of Health and Human Services
Public Health Service
National Institutes of Health
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
31 Center Drive
Building 31, Room 2B-11
Bethesda Maryland 20892-2182

February 6, 2008
John Weeks
3345 59th Avenue Southwest
Seattle, WA 98116
Dear Mr. Weeks:
I am responding to your letter regarding the new director of the National
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM), Dr. Josephine
Briggs, and her experience with complementary and alternative medicine.
As you know, the mission of NCCAM is to conduct rigorous research on CAM.
Dr. Briggs brings to her new position a depth of experience in conducting
research into complex problems and an enthusiasm for exploring the potential of
CAM.
As she introduced herself to our Advisory Council last week, she described how
her background as a kidney specialist who has treated patients with severe,
chronic illnesses has shown her firsthand how depersonalized the high-tech
systems of modern health care can be, how the focus on the whole patient is
often overlooked, and how patients are seeking practices that promote health
and wellness. There are needs that are often met better by CAM practitioners
and the growing programs of integrative medicine and are important aspects of
health that need to be examined.
Her plans for the next 6 months include intense listening. She will be talking
with many of our stakeholders, including representatives from professional and
consumer organizations and especially from the CAM
community. From these conversations, she will establish a set of priorities for
moving the NCCAM research portfolio forward.
Dr. Briggs has asked me to express her interest in hearing from all concerned
about the future directions of CAM research.
Sincerely,
Chris Thomsen
Director, Office of Communications and Public Liaison.

______________________________

Comment: In some of the responses to the Integrator
Open Letter, there was deep sadness, resignation even, that we might not see
inspired NCCAM leadership in our lifetimes. Yet hope
festers eternal. In this letter from Thomsen, there is a constellation of experience constructed by Briggs' public liaison which,
if the stars are connected just right, might allow Dr. Briggs to shift the
course of her experience and provide NCCAM with enlightened leadership.

One response is to give Briggs the
benefit of the doubt and suspend, for this time of Briggs' "intense
listening," any accrued disbelief in NCCAM's potential contributions.

There is also evidence against hope. First, Briggs chose to have her PR department respond. A direct letter would have been nice. I can
overlook this, in my fits of hopefulness, but have found colleagues more likely to dismiss the letter as pure PR flack. Yet they still urge that we give Briggs a chance.

What stood out to me as a negative was
that there is no reference to any plans on Dr. Briggs part to actually
experience any of the therapies or practitioners which she'll be charged with exploring. As Michael Cohen pointed out in his response to the Integrator Open Letter - dragging Rene Descartes into the picture as he did - experience may be a necessary requirement for exemplary leadership.

Your Chance to Mentor Briggs

Thomsen's letter leaves me with two thoughts. One is to give Briggs the
benefit of the doubt and suspend, for this time of Briggs' "intense
listening," any accrued disbelief in NCCAM's potential contributions to taking a led in exploring the value of whole-person practices in human health.
Assume common sense rather than rutted reduction. Have your professional
associations and institutions weigh in on where there may be gold in
integrative, holistic, whole person health care, Share with Briggs how NCCAM can help unearth
it. Let Briggs know how she can make NCCAM an exciting center of contribution
to health care by promoting freedom of expression and action among those who
she, if wise, will accept as her mentors. Write to her. Meet with her.

Meantime, allow yourself to consider appropriate action if "our" NIHCenter is led, again, by an overlord who cannot speak our native tongue and refuses participation in our practices. The most appropriate metaphor for
NIH's appointment of leaders who refuse to empower the population and ideas they are
charged to manage is colonization.

Given the potential duration of Briggs' appointment, we must begin to ask: Do we want to spend the foreseeable
future in subjugation to an ethos and rulers foreign to us? If not, what are our options?

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